Solange Seemingly Confirms Bill Murray Put His Hands Into Her Afro And Asked If It Was Her Hair
Solange seemingly confirmed fans' speculation involving Bill Murray potentially crossing a personal boundary live on TV.
The 'A Seat at the Table' singer liked tweets which seemed to confirm an incident which occurred while she appeared as a musical guest on 'Saturday Night Live.'
A social media user posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, calling out the reported incident, writing: "your yearly reminder that i saw Bill Murray put both his hands into Solange's scalp after asking her three times if her hair was a wig or not."
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The tweeter, an Emmy nominated TV producer and writer, also noted that the singer, 37, had just finished singing her iconic tune "Don't Touch My Hair."
"Since the tweet is going around just wanna clear it up: Don't Touch My Hair is not about Bill Murray. She had just finished performing that song on SNL when he did it. that's the audacity of whiteness," she clarifies.
"I am exhausted man," one user responded. "Imagine having to write a song about generations of yt folks obsessively wanting to touch us and our babies hair ONLY to be touched by someone who constantly sexually harasses women," another user wrote.
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Other X users defended Murray, either wondering what the big deal was, or citing the insignificance of the matter. "Why is this worthy of a 'yearly reminder'," one X user asked. "Trying to wonder why this matters," another questioned. "And why he's demonized by doing so."
Greena Davis made headlines in 2021 after the release of her memoir, "Dying of Politeness," where she claimed Murray, 73, allegedly harassed her during the making of the 1990 crime comedy 'Quick Change.'
She alleged that the 'Caddyshack' actor tried to use a massage device on her in a hotel room and berated her on set.
Knowles, the little sister of phenom Beyoncé Knowles, swept the Black and brown nation with her 2016 album "A Seat at the Table." The project, which was the third studio album from Knowles and debuted at No. 1 on the US Billboard 200 chart, encouraged Black girls all over the world to stand in truth, creativity, and power.